Unfortunately, there is not a way to set up notifications for Moments posts specifically, but you can sign up to receive alerts for new Exclusive News posts which will contain Moments information. Thank you for reaching out!

Unfortunately, there is not a way to set up notifications for Moments posts specifically, but you can sign up to receive alerts for new Exclusive News posts which will contain Moments information. Thank you for reaching out!

Thanks, but I needed to know when a moment comes up for sale. Some of them offer foxed redemptions like grandstand tickets for F1 race and I am pretty sure hot ones like Monte carlo will be gone in a few minutes - so if you dont check often sometimes multiple times in a day you could be out of luck.

Anyways wimbledon tickets are available now. As guessed it will be auction so I need to start pooling points.

erc - now is the time to be my pal and send some points my way. platpboy4ever - you too.

Well that's also an easy fix. Just setup the Marriott Moments webpage as an RSS feed directly to your email and make sure you have email notifications turned ON without any delay. Assuming you have a connected mobile device, you can receive the notifications in real-time. You may want to make a separate inbox folder for this feed in order to keep the Marriott moments all in one centralized place.

As an alternative, you could scrape the data from the webpage directly by writing a simple script and pushing it to your mobile device or just monitor their Facebook feed for updates.

For example, scraping the <div class="box-content">, <div class="points-box ">, and <div class="featured-info-location img"> fields gives you the name of the Marriott Moment, the starting bid price in points, and the location of the event. You can even filter out the ones that are already sold out. Currently there are a total of 242 Marriott Moments on the website as of today.

Nipper nails it - this is a case (one of many) where actually being an "Insider" is advantageous. You just happen to have the liability of having a thriving career, to which us old geezers reply, "oooga boooga"